430 results on '"Meierbachtol A"'
Search Results
2. Advanced Neuromuscular Training Differentially Changes Performance on Visuomotor Reaction Tests and Single-leg Hop Tests in Patients with ACL Reconstruction
- Author
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Terese Chmielewski, Michael Obermeier, Adam Meierbachtol, Asher Jenkins, Michael Stuart, Robby Sikka, and Marc Tompkins
- Subjects
Sports medicine ,RC1200-1245 - Abstract
# Background Advanced neuromuscular training prepares patients with anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) for sport participation. Return-to-sport testing often includes single-leg hop tests, yet combining motor and cognitive tasks (i.e., dual-task) might reveal neurocognitive reliance. # Purpose/Hypothesis This study examined changes in performance on visuomotor reactions tests and single-leg hop tests following advanced neuromuscular training in patients with ACLR. The hypothesis was that performance would improve less on reaction tests than on single-leg hop tests. # Study Design Quasi experimental, Pretest-Posttest # Methods Twenty-five patients with ACLR (11 males) completed 10 sessions of advanced neuromuscular training and pre-and post-training testing. Reaction tests outcomes were from a platform and visual display. The double-leg reaction test involved touching target dots with either leg for 20 seconds; correct touches and errors were recorded. The single-leg reaction test involved hopping on the test leg to 10 target dots; hop time and errors were recorded. Single-leg hop tests included forward, triple, crossover triple, and timed hop; limb symmetry index was recorded. Effect sizes were calculated for corrected touches on the double-leg reaction test, surgical side hop time on the single-leg reaction test, and surgical side hop distance or time on single-leg hop tests. # Results Correct touches on the double-leg reaction test significantly increased from pre- to post-training (20.4 +/- 4.3 vs. 23.9 +/- 2.8, p 0.05). Cohens d effect sizes in descending order was single-leg hop tests (d=0.9 to 1.3), double-leg reaction test (d=0.9), and single-leg reaction test (d=0.5). # Conclusion Motor performance improved after advanced neuromuscular training, but the effect size was less on visuomotor reaction tests than single-leg hop tests. The results suggest persistence of neurocognitive reliance after ACLR and a need for more dual-task challenges in training. # Level of Evidence 3
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
3. A multi-Physics Experiment for Low-Yield Nuclear Explosion Monitoring
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Myers, S, primary, Abbott, G, additional, Alexander, T, additional, Alger, E, additional, Alvarez, A, additional, Annabelle, N, additional, Antoun, T, additional, Auld, G, additional, Malach, A, additional, Banuelos, H, additional, Barela, M, additional, Barnhart, T, additional, Barrow, P, additional, Bartlett, T, additional, Bockman, A, additional, Bodmer, M, additional, Bogolub, K, additional, Bonner, J, additional, Borden, R, additional, Boukhalfa, H, additional, Bowman, D, additional, Britt, C, additional, Broman, B, additional, Broome, S, additional, Brown, B, additional, Burghardt, J, additional, Chester, D, additional, Choens, C, additional, Chojnicki, K, additional, Churby, A, additional, Cole, J, additional, Coleman, T, additional, Collard, J, additional, Couture, A, additional, Crosby, G, additional, Cruz-Cabrera, A, additional, D'Saint Angelo, D, additional, Dea, M, additional, Dekin, W, additional, DeVisser, B, additional, Dietel, M, additional, Downs, C, additional, Downs, N, additional, Dzenitis, E, additional, Eckert, E, additional, Eras, S, additional, Euler, G, additional, Ezzedine, S, additional, Fast, J, additional, Feldman, J, additional, Featherston, K, additional, Foxe, M, additional, Freimuth, C, additional, Fritz, B, additional, Galvin, G, additional, Gamboa, S, additional, Garner, L, additional, Gascoigne, T, additional, Gastelum, J, additional, Gaylord, J, additional, Gessey, D, additional, Glasgow, B, additional, Glavin, G, additional, Glomski, A, additional, Goodwin, M, additional, Green, D, additional, Griego, J, additional, Grover, S, additional, Gutierrez, J, additional, Haas, D, additional, Hall, R, additional, Hall, A, additional, Hardy, D, additional, Hauk, D, additional, Heath, J, additional, Holand, A, additional, Holdcroft, J, additional, Holland, A, additional, Honjas, W, additional, Howard, K, additional, Hudson, C, additional, Ingraham, M, additional, Jaramillo, J, additional, Jenkins, A, additional, Johnson, C, additional, Jones, K, additional, Falliner, F, additional, Junor, W, additional, Keillor, M, additional, Kent, G, additional, Keogh, M, additional, Kibikas, W, additional, Kleadbeater, K, additional, Knox, H, additional, Knox, J, additional, Kuhlman, K, additional, Kwiatkowski, C, additional, Laintz, K, additional, Lapka, J, additional, Larotonda, J, additional, Layne, J, additional, Ledoux, N, additional, Li, S, additional, Linneman, D, additional, Lipkowitz, P, additional, MacLeod, G, additional, McCann, E, additional, McCombe, R, additional, Meierbachtol, C, additional, Mellors, R, additional, Memmott, B, additional, Mendenhall, W, additional, Mendez, J, additional, Miller, X, additional, Miller, A, additional, Miranda, F, additional, Montano, M, additional, Moore, M, additional, Morris, J, additional, Munley, W, additional, Murillo, E, additional, Myers, T, additional, Navarro, A, additional, Nippress, S, additional, Otto, S, additional, Peacock, S, additional, Pemberton, S, additional, Perea, R, additional, Peterson, J, additional, Pierre-Yves, L, additional, Plank, G, additional, Podrasky, A, additional, Podrasky, D, additional, Pope, J, additional, Poskey, M, additional, Powell, M, additional, Price, A, additional, Puyleart, A, additional, Quintana, B, additional, Rahn, T, additional, Rendon, C, additional, Reppart, J, additional, Rico, H, additional, Roberts, B, additional, Robey, E, additional, Rodd, R, additional, Rodriguez, M, additional, Rogall, A, additional, Romanczuk, A, additional, Roth, M, additional, Salyer, G, additional, Savran, B, additional, Schalk, W, additional, Seifert, C, additional, Seitz, D, additional, Shao, X, additional, Sirota, D, additional, Slack, J, additional, Slater, D, additional, Smith, K, additional, Smith, D, additional, Spears, B, additional, Sprinkle, D, additional, Stead, R, additional, Stephens, M, additional, Strickland, C, additional, Tafoya, A, additional, Tafoya, J, additional, Tagoe, M, additional, Taguba, C, additional, Tarnecki, L, additional, Tatge, R, additional, Teich-McGoldrick, S, additional, Terry, B, additional, Thompson, R, additional, Townsend, M, additional, Tubbs, G, additional, Turley, R, additional, Valdez, N, additional, Van Morris, A, additional, Vergara, S, additional, Vigil, J, additional, Villanueva, J, additional, Vorobiev, O, additional, Wallace, D, additional, Walrath, T, additional, Wharton, S, additional, White, R, additional, White, H, additional, Whitehill, A, additional, Williams, M, additional, Wilson, J, additional, Wood, L, additional, Wright, C, additional, Wright, A, additional, Xu, G, additional, Yang, X, additional, Yost, R, additional, and Zeiler, C, additional
- Published
- 2024
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4. High-purity germanium semiconductor modeling in the detector response function toolkit
- Author
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Ahl, Corey, Andrews, Madison, Bates, Cameron, Borgwardt, Tyler, Meierbachtol, Krista, Woldegiorgis, Surafel, and Lukosi, Eric
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- 2024
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5. Greenland and Canadian Arctic ice temperature profiles database
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A. Løkkegaard, K. D. Mankoff, C. Zdanowicz, G. D. Clow, M. P. Lüthi, S. H. Doyle, H. H. Thomsen, D. Fisher, J. Harper, A. Aschwanden, B. M. Vinther, D. Dahl-Jensen, H. Zekollari, T. Meierbachtol, I. McDowell, N. Humphrey, A. Solgaard, N. B. Karlsson, S. A. Khan, B. Hills, R. Law, B. Hubbard, P. Christoffersen, M. Jacquemart, J. Seguinot, R. S. Fausto, and W. T. Colgan
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Here, we present a compilation of 95 ice temperature profiles from 85 boreholes from the Greenland ice sheet and peripheral ice caps, as well as local ice caps in the Canadian Arctic. Profiles from only 31 boreholes (36 %) were previously available in open-access data repositories. The remaining 54 borehole profiles (64 %) are being made digitally available here for the first time. These newly available profiles, which are associated with pre-2010 boreholes, have been submitted by community members or digitized from published graphics and/or data tables. All 95 profiles are now made available in both absolute (meters) and normalized (0 to 1 ice thickness) depth scales and are accompanied by extensive metadata. These metadata include a transparent description of data provenance. The ice temperature profiles span 70 years, with the earliest profile being from 1950 at Camp VI, West Greenland. To highlight the value of this database in evaluating ice flow simulations, we compare the ice temperature profiles from the Greenland ice sheet with an ice flow simulation by the Parallel Ice Sheet Model (PISM). We find a cold bias in modeled near-surface ice temperatures within the ablation area, a warm bias in modeled basal ice temperatures at inland cold-bedded sites, and an apparent underestimation of deformational heating in high-strain settings. These biases provide process level insight on simulated ice temperatures.
- Published
- 2023
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6. Quantification of the light output anistropy in deuterated stilbene
- Author
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Borgwardt, T.C., Bartlett, K.D., Smith, K., Meierbachtol, K.C., Weldon, R.A., Jr, Zaitseva, N., and Febbraro, M.
- Published
- 2024
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7. Multi-decadal elevation changes of the land terminating sector of West Greenland
- Author
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Jun Saito, Toby Meierbachtol, and Joel Harper
- Subjects
glacier fluctuations ,glacier monitoring ,glacier volume ,ice-sheet mass balance ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
Regional assessments of ice elevation change provide insight into the processes controlling an ice sheet's geometric response to climate forcing. In Southwest Greenland's land terminating sector (SWLTS), it is presumed that ice surface elevation changes result solely from changing surface mass balance (SMB). Here we test this assumption by developing a multi-decadal (1985–2017) record of elevation change from digital elevation models (DEMs) and comparing it to regional climate model output and available records of ice speed. The SWLTS thinned by >12 m on average over the full 32-year period, but the change was highly variable in time and space. Thinning was amplified in the central region of the SWLTS, relative to the north and south. During 1985–2007, the north and south regions demonstrated net thickening while the central region thinned. Regional differences in elevation change are inconsistent with SMB anomalies, indicating that enhanced ice flow in the north and south contributed to thickening during this early time interval. While clear validation in the south is prevented by incomplete velocity data, historical surface speeds in the north were elevated. These findings support the interpretation that changing ice flow can influence ice surface elevation in the slow-moving SWLTS.
- Published
- 2023
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8. Advancements of the nSpec system
- Author
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Borgwardt, T.C., Bartlett, K.D., Smith, K., Meierbachtol, K.C., Beckman, D., Toomey, R., King, T., and Febbraro, M.
- Published
- 2023
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9. Greenland and Canadian Arctic Ice Temperature Profiles Database
- Author
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Anja Løkkegaard, Kenneth D. Mankoff, Christian Zdanowicz, Gary D. Clow, Martin P. Lüthi, Samuel H. Doyle, Henrik H. Thomsen, David Fisher, Joel Harper, Andy Aschwanden, Bo M. Vinther, Dorthe Dahl-Jensen, Harry Zekollari, Toby Meierbachtol, Ian McDowell, Neil Humphrey, Anne Solgaard, Nanna B. Karlsson, Shfaqat A. Khan, Benjamin Hills, Robert Law, Bryn Hubbard, Poul Christoffersen, Mylène Jacquemart, Julien Seguinot, Robert S. Fausto, and William T. Colgan
- Subjects
Meteorology and Climatology - Abstract
Here, we present a compilation of 95 ice temperature profiles from 85 boreholes from the Greenland ice sheet and peripheral ice caps, as well as local ice caps in the Canadian Arctic. Profiles from only 31 boreholes (36 %) were previously available in open-access data repositories. The remaining 54 borehole profiles (64 %) are being made digitally available here for the first time. These newly available profiles, which are associated with pre-2010 boreholes, have been submitted by community members or digitized from published graphics and/or data tables. All 95 profiles are now made available in both absolute (meters) and normalized (0 to 1 ice thickness) depth scales and are accompanied by extensive metadata. These metadata include a transparent description of data provenance. The ice temperature profiles span 70 years, with the earliest profile being from 1950 at Camp VI, West Greenland. To highlight the value of this database in evaluating ice flow simulations, we compare the ice temperature profiles from the Greenland ice sheet with an ice flow simulation by the Parallel Ice Sheet Model (PISM). We find a cold bias in modeled near-surface ice temperatures within the ablation area, a warm bias in modeled basal ice temperatures at inland cold-bedded sites, and an apparent underestimation of deformational heating in high-strain settings. These biases provide process level insight on simulated ice temperatures.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Millennial-scale migration of the frozen/melted basal boundary, western Greenland ice sheet
- Author
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Aidan Stansberry, Joel Harper, Jesse V. Johnson, and Toby Meierbachtol
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Basal ice ,ice-sheet modeling ,ice temperature ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
The geometry and thermal structure of western Greenland ice sheet are known to have undergone relatively substantial change over the Holocene. Evolution of the frozen and melted fractions of the bed associated with the ice-sheet retreat over this time frame remains unclear. We address this question using a thermo-mechanically coupled flowline model to simulate a 11 ka period of ice-sheet retreat in west central Greenland. Results indicate an episode of ~100 km of terminus retreat corresponded to ~16 km of upstream frozen/melted basal boundary migration. The majority of migration of the frozen area is associated with the enhancement of the frictional and strain heating fields, which are accentuated toward the retreating ice margin. The thermally active bedrock layer acts as a heat sink, tending to slow contraction of frozen-bed conditions. Since the bedrock heat flux in our region is relatively low compared to other regions of the ice sheet, the frozen region is relatively greater and therefore more susceptible to marginward changes in the frictional and strain heating fields. Migration of melted regions thus depends on both geometric changes and the antecedent thermal state of the bedrock and ice, both of which vary considerably around the ice sheet.
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- 2022
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11. A compact neutron spectrometer system
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Borgwardt, T.C., Bartlett, K.D., Smith, K., and Meierbachtol, K.C.
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- 2022
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12. Correlated Prompt Fission Data in Transport Simulations
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Talou, P., Vogt, R., Randrup, J., Rising, M. E., Pozzi, S. A., Verbeke, J., Andrews, M. T., Clarke, S. D., Jaffke, P., Jandel, M., Kawano, T., Marcath, M. J., Meierbachtol, K., Nakae, L., Rusev, G., Sood, A., Stetcu, I., and Walker, C.
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Nuclear Theory ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Detailed information on the fission process can be inferred from the observation, modeling and theoretical understanding of prompt fission neutron and $\gamma$-ray~observables. Beyond simple average quantities, the study of distributions and correlations in prompt data, e.g., multiplicity-dependent neutron and \gray~spectra, angular distributions of the emitted particles, $n$-$n$, $n$-$\gamma$, and $\gamma$-$\gamma$~correlations, can place stringent constraints on fission models and parameters that would otherwise be free to be tuned separately to represent individual fission observables. The FREYA~and CGMF~codes have been developed to follow the sequential emissions of prompt neutrons and $\gamma$-rays~from the initial excited fission fragments produced right after scission. Both codes implement Monte Carlo techniques to sample initial fission fragment configurations in mass, charge and kinetic energy and sample probabilities of neutron and $\gamma$~emission at each stage of the decay. This approach naturally leads to using simple but powerful statistical techniques to infer distributions and correlations among many observables and model parameters. The comparison of model calculations with experimental data provides a rich arena for testing various nuclear physics models such as those related to the nuclear structure and level densities of neutron-rich nuclei, the $\gamma$-ray~strength functions of dipole and quadrupole transitions, the mechanism for dividing the excitation energy between the two nascent fragments near scission, and the mechanisms behind the production of angular momentum in the fragments, etc. Beyond the obvious interest from a fundamental physics point of view, such studies are also important for addressing data needs in various nuclear applications. (See text for full abstract.), Comment: 39 pages, 57 figure files, published in Eur. Phys. J. A, reference added this version
- Published
- 2017
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13. Go to the back before going forward: Addressing psychological responses in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction rehabilitation.
- Author
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Chmielewski, Terese L., Meierbachtol, Adam, Aberman, Rick, Gunderson, Travis, Sikorski, Jonathon, and Cummer, Kathleen
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ANTERIOR cruciate ligament ,REHABILITATION - Published
- 2024
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14. Deformation motion tracks sliding changes through summer, western Greenland
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Nathan Maier, Neil Humphrey, Toby Meierbachtol, and Joel Harper
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Basal ice ,glacier flow ,ice dynamics ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
Surface speeds in Greenland's ablation zone undergo substantial variability on an annual basis which are presumed to mainly be driven by changes in sliding. Yet, meltwater-forced changes in ice–bed coupling can also produce variable deformation motion, which impacts the magnitude of sliding changes inferred from surface measurements and provides important context to flow dynamics. We examine spatiotemporal changes in deformation, sliding and surface velocities over a 2-year period using GPS and a dense network of inclinometers installed in borehole grid drilled in western Greenland's ablation zone. We find time variations in deformation motion track sliding changes through the summer and entire measurement period. A distinct spatial deformation and sliding pattern is also observed within the borehole grid which remains similar during winter and summer flow. We suggest that positively covarying sliding and deformation across seasonal timescales is characteristic of passive areas that are coupled to regions undergoing transient forcing, and the spatial patterns are consistent with variations in the local bed topography. The covarying deformation and sliding result in a 1.5–17% overestimate of sliding changes during summer compared to that inferred from surface velocity changes alone. This suggests that summer sliding increases are likely overestimated in many locations across Greenland.
- Published
- 2022
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15. Generation and fate of basal meltwater during winter, western Greenland Ice Sheet
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J. Harper, T. Meierbachtol, N. Humphrey, J. Saito, and A. Stansberry
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Basal sliding in the ablation zone of the Greenland Ice Sheet is closely associated with water from surface melt introduced to the bed in summer, yet melting of basal ice also generates subglacial water year-round. Assessments of basal melt rely on modeling with results strongly dependent upon assumptions with poor observational constraints. Here we use surface and borehole measurements to investigate the generation and fate of basal meltwater in the ablation zone of Isunnguata Sermia basin, western Greenland. The observational data are used to constrain estimates of the heat and water balances, providing insights into subglacial hydrology during the winter months when surface melt is minimal or nonexistent. Despite relatively slow ice flow speeds during winter, the basal meltwater generation from sliding friction remains manyfold greater than that due to geothermal heat flux. A steady acceleration of ice flow over the winter period at our borehole sites can cause the rate of basal water generation to increase by up to 20 %. Borehole measurements show high but steady basal water pressure rather than monotonically increasing pressure. Ice and groundwater sinks for water do not likely have sufficient capacity to accommodate the meltwater generated in winter. Analysis of basal cavity dynamics suggests that cavity opening associated with flow acceleration likely accommodates only a portion of the basal meltwater, implying that a residual is routed to the terminus through a poorly connected drainage system. A forcing from cavity expansion at high pressure may explain observations of winter acceleration in western Greenland.
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- 2021
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16. Go to the back before going forward: Addressing psychological responses in ACL reconstruction rehabilitation
- Author
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Chmielewski, Terese L., primary, Meierbachtol, Adam, additional, Aberman, Rick, additional, Gunderson, Travis, additional, Sikorski, Jonathon, additional, and Cummer, Kathleen, additional
- Published
- 2024
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17. Physical limits to meltwater penetration in firn
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Neil F. Humphrey, Joel T. Harper, and Toby W. Meierbachtol
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Glacier hydrology ,melt–surface ,polar firn ,snow/ice surface processes ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
Processes governing meltwater penetration into cold firn remain poorly constrained. Here, in situ experiments are used to develop a grain-scale model to investigate physical limitations on meltwater infiltration in firn. At two sites in Greenland, drilling pumped water into cold firn to >75 m depth, and the thermo-hydrologic evolution of the firn column was measured. Rather than filling all available pore space, the water formed perched aquifers with downward penetration halted by thermal and density conditions. The two sites formed deep aquifers at ~40 m depth and at densities considerably less than the air pore close-off density (~725 kg m−3 at −18°C, and ~750 kg m−3 at −14°C), demonstrating that some pore space at depth remains inaccessible. A geometric grain-scale model of firn is constructed to quantify the limits of a descending fully saturated wetting front in cold firn. Agreement between the model and field data implies the model includes the first-order effects of water and heat flow in a firn lattice. The model constrains the relative importance of firn density, temperature and grain/pore size in inhibiting wetting front migration. Results imply that deep infiltration, including that which leads to firn aquifer formation, does not have access to all available firn pore space.
- Published
- 2021
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18. Rapid and sensitive response of Greenland’s groundwater system to ice sheet change
- Author
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Liljedahl, Lillemor Claesson, Meierbachtol, Toby, Harper, Joel, van As, Dirk, Näslund, Jens-Ove, Selroos, Jan-Olof, Saito, Jun, Follin, Sven, Ruskeeniemi, Timo, Kontula, Anne, and Humphrey, Neil
- Published
- 2021
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19. Advanced Neuromuscular Training Differentially Changes Performance on Visuomotor Reaction Tests and Single-leg Hop Tests in Patients with ACL Reconstruction.
- Author
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Chmielewski, Terese, Obermeier, Michael, Meierbachtol, Adam, Jenkins, Asher, Stuart, Michael, Sikka, Robby, and Tompkins, Marc
- Subjects
LEG physiology ,ANTERIOR cruciate ligament surgery ,LEG ,T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis ,CLINICAL trials ,TOUCH ,REHABILITATION ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ONE-leg resting position ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,SPORTS participation ,SPORTS re-entry ,RESEARCH methodology ,ELECTRONIC health records ,STATISTICS ,BODY movement ,REACTION time ,DATA analysis software ,NEURODEVELOPMENTAL treatment - Abstract
Background: Advanced neuromuscular training prepares patients with anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) for sport participation. Return-to-sport testing often includes single-leg hop tests, yet combining motor and cognitive tasks (i.e., dual-task) might reveal neurocognitive reliance. Purpose/Hypothesis: This study examined changes in performance on visuomotor reactions tests and single-leg hop tests following advanced neuromuscular training in patients with ACLR. The hypothesis was that performance would improve less on reaction tests than on single-leg hop tests. Study Design: Quasi experimental, Pretest-Posttest Methods: Twenty-five patients with ACLR (11 males) completed 10 sessions of advanced neuromuscular training and pre-and post-training testing. Reaction tests outcomes were from a platform and visual display. The double-leg reaction test involved touching target dots with either leg for 20 seconds; correct touches and errors were recorded. The single-leg reaction test involved hopping on the test leg to 10 target dots; hop time and errors were recorded. Single-leg hop tests included forward, triple, crossover triple, and timed hop; limb symmetry index was recorded. Effect sizes were calculated for corrected touches on the double-leg reaction test, surgical side hop time on the single-leg reaction test, and surgical side hop distance or time on single-leg hop tests. Results: Correct touches on the double-leg reaction test significantly increased from pre- to post-training (20.4 +/- 4.3 vs. 23.9 +/- 2.8, p<0.001). Hop time on the single-leg reaction test significantly decreased from pre- to post-training (Surgical leg 13.2 vs. 12.3 seconds, non-surgical leg 13.0 vs. 12.1 seconds, p=0.003). Mean errors did not significantly change on either reaction test (p> 0.05). Cohens d effect sizes in descending order was single-leg hop tests (d=0.9 to 1.3), double-leg reaction test (d=0.9), and single-leg reaction test (d=0.5). Conclusion: Motor performance improved after advanced neuromuscular training, but the effect size was less on visuomotor reaction tests than single-leg hop tests. The results suggest persistence of neurocognitive reliance after ACLR and a need for more dual-task challenges in training. Level of Evidence: 3 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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20. Hot water drilling in the firn layer of Greenland's percolation zone
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Neil Humphrey, Joel Harper, and Toby Meierbachtol
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Melt – surface ,glaciological instruments and methods ,polar firn ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
The intermixed thermal and structural framework of cold firn, water-saturated firn and ice layers in Greenland's percolation zone can be challenging to penetrate with core drills. Here, we present our experiences using a hot water drill for research on the firn layer of the percolation zone. We built and deployed a lightweight and easily transportable system for drilling a transect of ~15 cm diameter boreholes through the full firn column thickness, to depths exceeding 100 m. An instrumented drill stem provides a scientific measurement of the firn properties while drilling. The system was successful at gaining rapid access to the firn column with mixed wet and cold conditions, was easily transported to the site and across the glacier surface, and required a small field crew to operate. The boreholes are well suited for in situ investigations of firn processes in Greenland percolation zone.
- Published
- 2021
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21. Elastic breakup cross sections of well-bound nucleons
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Wimmer, K., Bazin, D., Gade, A., Tostevin, J. A., Baugher, T., Chajecki, Z., Coupland, D., Famiano, M. A., Ghosh, T. K., Howard, G. F. Grinyer M. E., Kilburn, M., Lynch, W. G., Manning, B., Meierbachtol, K., Quarterman, P., Ratkiewicz, A., Sanetullaev, A., Showalter, R. H., Stroberg, S. R., Tsang, M. B., Weisshaar, D., Winkelbauer, J., Winkler, R., and Youngs, M.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The 9Be(28Mg,27Na) one-proton removal reaction with a large proton separation energy of Sp(28Mg)=16.79 MeV is studied at intermediate beam energy. Coincidences of the bound 27Na residues with protons and other light charged particles are measured. These data are analyzed to determine the percentage contributions to the proton removal cross section from the elastic and inelastic nucleon removal mechanisms. These deduced contributions are compared with the eikonal reaction model predictions and with the previously measured data for reactions involving the re- moval of more weakly-bound protons from lighter nuclei. The role of transitions of the proton between different bound single-particle configurations upon the elastic breakup cross section is also quantified in this well-bound case. The measured and calculated elastic breakup fractions are found to be in good agreement., Comment: Phys. Rev. C 2014 (accepted)
- Published
- 2014
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22. The cooling signature of basal crevasses in a hard-bedded region of the Greenland Ice Sheet
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I. E. McDowell, N. F. Humphrey, J. T. Harper, and T. W. Meierbachtol
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Temperature sensors installed in a grid of nine full-depth boreholes drilled in the southwestern ablation zone of the Greenland Ice Sheet recorded cooling in discrete sections of ice over time within the lowest third of the ice column in most boreholes. Rates of temperature change outpace cooling expected from vertical conduction alone. Additionally, observed temperature profiles deviate significantly from the site-average thermal profile that is shaped by all thermomechanical processes upstream. These deviations imply recent, localized changes to the basal thermal state in the boreholes. Although numerous heat sources exist to add energy and warm ice as it moves from the central divide towards the margin such as strain heat from internal deformation, latent heat from refreezing meltwater, and the conduction of geothermal heat across the ice–bedrock interface, identifying heat sinks proves more difficult. After eliminating possible mechanisms that could cause cooling, we find that the observed cooling is a manifestation of previous warming in near-basal ice. Thermal decay after latent heat is released from freezing water in basal crevasses is the most likely mechanism resulting in the transient evolution of temperature and the vertical thermal structure observed at our site. We argue basal crevasses are a viable englacial heat source in the basal ice of Greenland's ablation zone and may have a controlling influence on the temperature structure of the near-basal ice.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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23. Quantification of the light output anistropy in deuterated stilbene
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Borgwardt, T.C., primary, Bartlett, K.D., additional, Smith, K., additional, Meierbachtol, K.C., additional, Weldon, R.A., additional, Zaitseva, N., additional, and Febbraro, M., additional
- Published
- 2023
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24. Development of position-sensitive time-of-flight spectrometer for fission fragment research
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Arnold, C. W., Tovesson, F., Meierbachtol, K., Bredeweg, T., Jandel, M., Jorgenson, H. J., Laptev, A., Rusev, G., Shields, D. W., White, M., Blakeley, R. E., Mader, D. M., and Hecht, A. A.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
A position-sensitive, high-resolution time-of-flight detector for fission fragments has been developed. The SPectrometer for Ion DEterminiation in fission Research (SPIDER) is a $2E-2v$ spectrometer designed to measure the mass of light fission fragments to a single mass unit. The time pick-off detector pairs to be used in SPIDER have been tested with $\alpha$-particles from $^{229}$Th and its decay chain and $\alpha$-particles and spontaneous fission fragments from $^{252}$Cf. Each detector module is comprised of a thin electron conversion foil, electrostatic mirror, microchannel plates, and delay-line anodes. Particle trajectories on the order of 700 mm are determined accurately to within 0.7 mm. Flight times on the order of 70 ns were measured with 200 ps resolution FWHM. Computed particle velocities are accurate to within 0.06 mm/ns corresponding to precision of 0.5%. An ionization chamber capable of 400 keV energy resolution coupled with the velocity measurements described here will pave the way for modestly efficient measurements of light fission fragments with unit mass resolution., Comment: 15 pages 6 figures
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Horizontal ice flow impacts the firn structure of Greenland's percolation zone
- Author
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R. Leone, J. Harper, T. Meierbachtol, and N. Humphrey
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
One-dimensional simulations of firn evolution neglect horizontal advection from ice flow, which transports the firn column across climate gradients as it is buried by accumulation. Using a suite of model runs, we demonstrate the impacts of horizontal advection on the development of firn density, temperature, and the stratigraphy of melt features through the Greenland ice sheet percolation zone. The simulations isolate processes in synthetic runs and investigate four specific transects and an ice core site. Relative to one-dimensional simulations, the horizontal advection process tends to increase the pore close-off depth, reduce the heat content, and decrease the frequency of melt features with depth by emplacing firn sourced from higher locations under increasingly warm and melt-affected surface conditions. Preservation of the advected pore space and cold content is strongly dependent upon the depth of meltwater infiltration. Horizontal ice flow interacts with topography, climate gradients, and meltwater infiltration to influence the evolution of the firn column structure; the interaction between these variables modulates the impact of horizontal advection on firn at locations around Greenland. Pore close-off and firn temperature are mainly impacted in the lowermost 20–30 km of the percolation zone, which may be relevant to migration of the lower percolation zone. Relatively high in the percolation zone, however, the stratigraphy of melt features can have an advection-derived component that should not be conflated with changing climate.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Correlations in intermediate-energy two-proton removal reactions
- Author
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Wimmer, K., Bazin, D., Gade, A., Tostevin, J. A., Baugher, T., Chajecki, Z., Coupland, D., Famiano, M. A., Ghosh, T. K., Grinyer, G. F., Hodges, R., Howard, M. E., Kilburn, M., Lynch, W. G., Manning, B., Meierbachtol, K., Quarterman, P., Ratkiewicz, A., Sanetullaev, A., Simpson, E. C., Stroberg, S. R., Tsang, M. B., Weisshaar, D., Winkelbauer, J., Winkler, R., and Youngs, M.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
We report final-state-exclusive measurements of the light charged fragments in coincidence with 26Ne residual nuclei following the direct two-proton removal from a neutron-rich 28Mg secondary beam. A Dalitz-plot analysis and comparisons with simulations show that a majority of the triple- coincidence events with two protons display phase-space correlations consistent with the (two-body) kinematics of a spatially-correlated pair-removal mechanism. The fraction of such correlated events, 56(12) %, is consistent with the fraction of the calculated cross section, 64 %, arising from spin S = 0 two-proton configurations in the entrance-channel (shell-model) 28Mg ground state wave function. This result promises access to an additional and more specific probe of the spin and spatial correlations of valence nucleon pairs in exotic nuclei produced as fast secondary beams., Comment: accepted for publication in Physical Review Letters
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Probing elastic and inelastic breakup contributions to intermediate-energy two-proton removal reactions
- Author
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Wimmer, K., Bazin, D., Gade, A., Tostevin, J. A., Baugher, T., Chajecki, Z., Coupland, D., Famiano, M. A., Ghosh, T. K., Grinyer, G. F., Hodges, R., Howard, M. E., Kilburn, M., Lynch, W. G., Manning, B., Meierbachtol, K., Quarterman, P., Ratkiewicz, A., Sanetullaev, A., Stroberg, S. R., Tsang, M. B., Weisshaar, D., Winkelbauer, J., and Youngs, R. Winkler M.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The two-proton removal reaction from 28Mg projectiles has been studied at 93 MeV/u at the NSCL. First coincidence measurements of the heavy 26Ne projectile residues, the removed protons and other light charged particles enabled the relative cross sections from each of the three possible elastic and inelastic proton removal mechanisms to be determined. These more final-state-exclusive measurements are key for further interrogation of these reaction mechanisms and use of the reaction channel for quantitative spectroscopy of very neutron-rich nuclei. The relative and absolute yields of the three contributing mechanisms are compared to reaction model expectations - based on the use of eikonal dynamics and sd-shell-model structure amplitudes., Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review C (Rapid Communication)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Inverse-kinematics one-neutron pickup with fast rare-isotope beams
- Author
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Gade, A., Tostevin, J. A., Baugher, T., Bazin, D., Brown, B. A., Campbell, C. M., Glasmacher, T., Grinyer, G. F., McDaniel, S., Meierbachtol, K., Ratkiewicz, A., Stroberg, S. R., Walsh, K. A., Weisshaar, D., and Winkler, R.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
New measurements and reaction model calculations are reported for single neutron pickup reactions onto a fast \nuc{22}{Mg} secondary beam at 84 MeV per nucleon. Measurements were made on both carbon and beryllium targets, having very different structures, allowing a first investigation of the likely nature of the pickup reaction mechanism. The measurements involve thick reaction targets and $\gamma$-ray spectroscopy of the projectile-like reaction residue for final-state resolution, that permit experiments with low incident beam rates compared to traditional low-energy transfer reactions. From measured longitudinal momentum distributions we show that the $\nuc{12}{C} (\nuc{22}{Mg},\nuc{23}{Mg}+\gamma)X$ reaction largely proceeds as a direct two-body reaction, the neutron transfer producing bound \nuc{11}{C} target residues. The corresponding reaction on the \nuc{9}{Be} target seems to largely leave the \nuc{8}{Be} residual nucleus unbound at excitation energies high in the continuum. We discuss the possible use of such fast-beam one-neutron pickup reactions to track single-particle strength in exotic nuclei, and also their expected sensitivity to neutron high-$\ell$ (intruder) states which are often direct indicators of shell evolution and the disappearance of magic numbers in the exotic regime., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Comparing Greenland Ice Sheet Melt Variability From Different Satellite Passive Microwave Remote Sensing Products Over a Common 5-year Record
- Author
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John S. Kimball, Jinyang Du, Toby W. Meierbachtol, Youngwook Kim, and Jesse V. Johnson
- Subjects
greenland ,remote sensing ,surface melt ,passive microwave ,melt extent ,Science - Abstract
Satellite microwave brightness temperature (Tb) observations over the Greenland Ice Sheet permit determination of melted/frozen snow conditions at spatial and temporal scales that are uniquely suited for climate model validation and metrics of ice sheet change. Strong microwave sensitivity to the presence of liquid water in the snowpack is clear. Yet, a host of unique microwave-derived melt products covering the ice sheet are available, each based on different methodology, and with unknown inter-product agreement. Here, we compared five different published microwave melt products over a common 5-year (2003–2007) record to establish compatibility between products and agreement with in situ observations from a network of on-ice weather stations (AWS) spanning the ice sheet. A sixth product, leveraging both Tb seasonal trends and diurnal variability, was also introduced and included in the comparison. We found variable agreement between products and observations, with melt estimates based on microwave emissions modeling and the newly presented Adaptive Threshold (ADT) algorithm showing the best performance for AWS sites with more than 1-day average annual melt period (e.g., 68.9% of ADT melt days consistent with AWS observations; 31.1% of ADT frozen days contrasting with AWS observed melt). Spatial patterns of melting also varied between products. The different products showed substantial spread in melt occurrence even for products with the best AWS agreement. Product differences were generally larger under higher melt conditions; whereby, the fraction of the ice sheet experiencing ≥25 days of melting each year ranged from 4 to 25% for different products. While long-term satellite records have consistently shown increasing decadal trends in melt extent, our results imply that the melt frequency at any given location, particularly in the ice sheet interior where melting is less prevalent, is still subject to significant uncertainty.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Greenland and Canadian Arctic ice temperature profiles database
- Author
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Løkkegaard, Anja, primary, Mankoff, Kenneth D., additional, Zdanowicz, Christian, additional, Clow, Gary D., additional, Lüthi, Martin P., additional, Doyle, Samuel H., additional, Thomsen, Henrik H., additional, Fisher, David, additional, Harper, Joel, additional, Aschwanden, Andy, additional, Vinther, Bo M., additional, Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe, additional, Zekollari, Harry, additional, Meierbachtol, Toby, additional, McDowell, Ian, additional, Humphrey, Neil, additional, Solgaard, Anne, additional, Karlsson, Nanna B., additional, Khan, Shfaqat A., additional, Hills, Benjamin, additional, Law, Robert, additional, Hubbard, Bryn, additional, Christoffersen, Poul, additional, Jacquemart, Mylène, additional, Seguinot, Julien, additional, Fausto, Robert S., additional, and Colgan, William T., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Specification of the near-Earth space environment with SHIELDS
- Author
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Jordanova, V.K., Delzanno, G.L., Henderson, M.G., Godinez, H.C., Jeffery, C.A., Lawrence, E.C., Morley, S.K., Moulton, J.D., Vernon, L.J., Woodroffe, J.R., Brito, T.V., Engel, M.A., Meierbachtol, C.S., Svyatsky, D., Yu, Y., Tóth, G., Welling, D.T., Chen, Y., Haiducek, J., Markidis, S., Albert, J.M., Birn, J., Denton, M.H., and Horne, R.B.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Vessels Irradiation Experimental Campaign
- Author
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McClanahan, Tucker, primary, Marcath, Matthew, additional, Mayo, Douglas, additional, Meierbachtol, Krista, additional, Klain, Kimberly, additional, Gonzales, Samuel, additional, Engeman, Scott, additional, and Mclean, Thomas, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. An electrostatic Particle-In-Cell code on multi-block structured meshes
- Author
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Meierbachtol, Collin S., Svyatskiy, Daniil, Delzanno, Gian Luca, Vernon, Louis J., and Moulton, J. David
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Processes influencing heat transfer in the near-surface ice of Greenland's ablation zone
- Author
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B. H. Hills, J. T. Harper, T. W. Meierbachtol, J. V. Johnson, N. F. Humphrey, and P. J. Wright
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
To assess the influence of various heat transfer processes on the thermal structure of near-surface ice in Greenland's ablation zone, we compare in situ measurements with thermal modeling experiments. A total of seven temperature strings were installed at three different field sites, each with between 17 and 32 sensors and extending up to 21 m below the ice surface. In one string, temperatures were measured every 30 min, and the record is continuous for more than 3 years. We use these measured ice temperatures to constrain our modeling experiments, focusing on four isolated processes and assessing the relative importance of each for the near-surface ice temperature: (1) the moving boundary of an ablating surface, (2) thermal insulation by snow, (3) radiative energy input, and (4) subsurface ice temperature gradients below the seasonally active near-surface layer. In addition to these four processes, transient heating events were observed in two of the temperature strings. Despite no observations of meltwater pathways to the subsurface, these heating events are likely the refreezing of liquid water below 5–10 m of cold ice. Together with subsurface refreezing, the five heat transfer mechanisms presented here account for measured differences of up to 3 °C between the mean annual air temperature and the ice temperature at the depth where annual temperature variability is dissipated. Thus, in Greenland's ablation zone, the mean annual air temperature is not a reliable predictor of the near-surface ice temperature, as is commonly assumed.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Short duration water pressure transients in western Greenland's subglacial drainage system
- Author
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TOBY W. MEIERBACHTOL, JOEL T. HARPER, and NEIL F. HUMPHREY
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. SNAP-IV Detector for Neutron Measurements in Safeguards and Nonproliferation.
- Author
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Meierbachtol, Krista, Sorensen, Eric, Johnson, Chris, Borgwardt, Tyler, Romero, Chris D., Jones, David, and Harvis, Keenan
- Subjects
NEUTRON counters ,COMPUTER software ,POLYETHYLENE ,ASPHALT ,LITHIUM-ion batteries - Abstract
The shielded neutron assay probe (SNAP) neutron detector for passive neutron counting, neutron source strength measurements, and material transmission estimates upgrade has been completed to the benefit of a wide-ranging community of users. This paper details the hardware and software upgrades involved. The total efficiency of the SNAP-IV has been upgraded and characterized for four different measurement configurations, and is described in this paper. The effects of a shift in neutron energy spectrum on the characterized efficiency were studied for a variety of common neutron sources and shown to have a correlation on the subsequent neutron source strength calculations provided to the user. Finally, the approach of using two modes of detector operation is demonstrated to provide an estimate of thickness of an intervening material. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
37. Multi-decadal elevation changes of the land terminating sector of West Greenland
- Author
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Jun Saito, Toby Meierbachtol, and Joel Harper
- Subjects
Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Regional assessments of ice elevation change provide insight into the processes controlling an ice sheet's geometric response to climate forcing. In Southwest Greenland's land terminating sector (SWLTS), it is presumed that ice surface elevation changes result solely from changing surface mass balance (SMB). Here we test this assumption by developing a multi-decadal (1985–2017) record of elevation change from digital elevation models (DEMs) and comparing it to regional climate model output and available records of ice speed. The SWLTS thinned by >12 m on average over the full 32-year period, but the change was highly variable in time and space. Thinning was amplified in the central region of the SWLTS, relative to the north and south. During 1985–2007, the north and south regions demonstrated net thickening while the central region thinned. Regional differences in elevation change are inconsistent with SMB anomalies, indicating that enhanced ice flow in the north and south contributed to thickening during this early time interval. While clear validation in the south is prevented by incomplete velocity data, historical surface speeds in the north were elevated. These findings support the interpretation that changing ice flow can influence ice surface elevation in the slow-moving SWLTS.
- Published
- 2022
38. Greenland and Canadian Arctic ice temperature profiles database
- Author
-
Løkkegaard, Anja, Mankoff, Kenneth D., Zdanowicz, Christian, Clow, Gary D., Lüthi, Martin P., Doyle, Samuel H., Thomsen, Henrik H., Fisher, David, Harper, Joel, Aschwanden, Andy, Vinther, Bo M., Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe, Zekollari, Harry, Meierbachtol, Toby, McDowell, Ian, Humphrey, Neil, Solgaard, Anne, Karlsson, Nanna B., Khan, Shfaqat A., Hills, Benjamin, Law, Robert, Hubbard, Bryn, Christoffersen, Poul, Jacquemart, Mylène, Seguinot, Julien, Fausto, Robert S., Colgan, William T., Løkkegaard, Anja, Mankoff, Kenneth D., Zdanowicz, Christian, Clow, Gary D., Lüthi, Martin P., Doyle, Samuel H., Thomsen, Henrik H., Fisher, David, Harper, Joel, Aschwanden, Andy, Vinther, Bo M., Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe, Zekollari, Harry, Meierbachtol, Toby, McDowell, Ian, Humphrey, Neil, Solgaard, Anne, Karlsson, Nanna B., Khan, Shfaqat A., Hills, Benjamin, Law, Robert, Hubbard, Bryn, Christoffersen, Poul, Jacquemart, Mylène, Seguinot, Julien, Fausto, Robert S., and Colgan, William T.
- Abstract
Here, we present a compilation of 95 ice temperature profiles from 85 boreholes from the Greenland ice sheet and peripheral ice caps, as well as local ice caps in the Canadian Arctic. Profiles from only 31 boreholes (36 %) were previously available in open-access data repositories. The remaining 54 borehole profiles (64 %) are being made digitally available here for the first time. These newly available profiles, which are associated with pre-2010 boreholes, have been submitted by community members or digitized from published graphics and/or data tables. All 95 profiles are now made available in both absolute (meters) and normalized (0 to 1 ice thickness) depth scales and are accompanied by extensive metadata. These metadata include a transparent description of data provenance. The ice temperature profiles span 70 years, with the earliest profile being from 1950 at Camp VI, West Greenland. To highlight the value of this database in evaluating ice flow simulations, we compare the ice temperature profiles from the Greenland ice sheet with an ice flow simulation by the Parallel Ice Sheet Model (PISM). We find a cold bias in modeled near-surface ice temperatures within the ablation area, a warm bias in modeled basal ice temperatures at inland cold-bedded sites, and an apparent underestimation of deformational heating in high-strain settings. These biases provide process level insight on simulated ice temperatures.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Greenland and Canadian Arctic ice temperature profiles database
- Author
-
Løkkegaard, Anja; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1947-5773, Mankoff, Kenneth D; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5453-2019, Zdanowicz, Christian; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1045-5063, Clow, Gary D; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2262-3853, Lüthi, Martin P; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4419-8496, Doyle, Samuel H; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0853-431X, Thomsen, Henrik H, Fisher, David, Harper, Joel; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2151-8509, Aschwanden, Andy; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8149-2315, Vinther, Bo M, Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe, Zekollari, Harry; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7443-4034, Meierbachtol, Toby, McDowell, Ian; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1285-724X, Humphrey, Neil, Solgaard, Anne; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8693-620X, Karlsson, Nanna B; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0423-8705, Khan, Shfaqat A; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2689-8563, Hills, Benjamin; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4490-7416, Law, Robert; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0067-5537, Hubbard, Bryn; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3565-3875, Christoffersen, Poul; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2643-8724, Jacquemart, Mylène; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2501-7645, Seguinot, Julien; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5315-0761, Fausto, Robert S; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1317-8185, Colgan, William T; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6334-1660, Løkkegaard, Anja; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1947-5773, Mankoff, Kenneth D; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5453-2019, Zdanowicz, Christian; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1045-5063, Clow, Gary D; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2262-3853, Lüthi, Martin P; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4419-8496, Doyle, Samuel H; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0853-431X, Thomsen, Henrik H, Fisher, David, Harper, Joel; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2151-8509, Aschwanden, Andy; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8149-2315, Vinther, Bo M, Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe, Zekollari, Harry; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7443-4034, Meierbachtol, Toby, McDowell, Ian; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1285-724X, Humphrey, Neil, Solgaard, Anne; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8693-620X, Karlsson, Nanna B; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0423-8705, Khan, Shfaqat A; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2689-8563, Hills, Benjamin; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4490-7416, Law, Robert; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0067-5537, Hubbard, Bryn; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3565-3875, Christoffersen, Poul; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2643-8724, Jacquemart, Mylène; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2501-7645, Seguinot, Julien; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5315-0761, Fausto, Robert S; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1317-8185, and Colgan, William T; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6334-1660
- Abstract
Here, we present a compilation of 95 ice temperature profiles from 85 boreholes from the Greenland ice sheet and peripheral ice caps, as well as local ice caps in the Canadian Arctic. Profiles from only 31 boreholes (36 %) were previously available in open-access data repositories. The remaining 54 borehole profiles (64 %) are being made digitally available here for the first time. These newly available profiles, which are associated with pre-2010 boreholes, have been submitted by community members or digitized from published graphics and/or data tables. All 95 profiles are now made available in both absolute (meters) and normalized (0 to 1 ice thickness) depth scales and are accompanied by extensive metadata. These metadata include a transparent description of data provenance. The ice temperature profiles span 70 years, with the earliest profile being from 1950 at Camp VI, West Greenland. To highlight the value of this database in evaluating ice flow simulations, we compare the ice temperature profiles from the Greenland ice sheet with an ice flow simulation by the Parallel Ice Sheet Model (PISM). We find a cold bias in modeled near-surface ice temperatures within the ablation area, a warm bias in modeled basal ice temperatures at inland cold-bedded sites, and an apparent underestimation of deformational heating in high-strain settings. These biases provide process level insight on simulated ice temperatures.
- Published
- 2023
40. Three‐Dimensional Broadband Interferometric Mapping and Polarization (BIMAP‐3D) Observations of Lightning Discharge Processes
- Author
-
Shao, Xuan‐Min, primary, Jensen, Daniel, additional, Ho, Cheng, additional, Graham, Paul, additional, Haynes, William, additional, Caffrey, Michael, additional, Raby, Eric, additional, Meierbachtol, Collin, additional, Hemsing, David, additional, and Sonnenfeld, Richard, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Mechanical forcing of water pressure in a hydraulically isolated reach beneath Western Greenland's ablation zone
- Author
-
Toby W. Meierbachtol, Joel T. Harper, Neil F. Humphrey, and Patrick J. Wright
- Subjects
glacier hydrology ,subglacial processes ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
A suite of surface and basal measurements during and after borehole drilling is used to perform in situ investigation of the local basal drainage system and pressure forcing in western Greenland. Drill and borehole water temperature were monitored during borehole drilling, which was performed with dyed hot water. After drilling, borehole water pressure and basal dye concentration were measured concurrently with positions in a GPS strain diamond at the surface. Water pressure exhibited diurnal changes in antiphase with velocity. Dye monitoring in the borehole revealed stagnant basal water for nearly 2 weeks. The interpretation of initial connection to an isolated basal cavity is corroborated by the thermal signature of borehole water during hot water drilling. Measurement-based estimates of cavity size are on the order of cubic meters, and analysis indicates that small changes in its volume could induce the observed pressure variations. It is found that longitudinal coupling effects are unable to force necessary volume changes at the site. Sliding-driven basal cavity opening and elastic uplift from load transfer are plausible mechanisms controlling pressure variations. Elastic uplift requires forcing from a hydraulically connected reach, which observations suggest must be relatively small and in close proximity to the isolated cavity.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The SPIDER fission fragment spectrometer for fission product yield measurements
- Author
-
Meierbachtol, K., Tovesson, F., Shields, D., Arnold, C., Blakeley, R., Bredeweg, T., Devlin, M., Hecht, A.A., Heffern, L.E., Jorgenson, J., Laptev, A., Mader, D., O׳Donnell, J.M., Sierk, A., and White, M.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Three‐Dimensional Broadband Interferometric Mapping and Polarization (BIMAP‐3D) Observations of Lightning Discharge Processes
- Author
-
Xuan‐Min Shao, Daniel Jensen, Cheng Ho, Paul Graham, William Haynes, Michael Caffrey, Eric Raby, Collin Meierbachtol, David Hemsing, and Richard Sonnenfeld
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,Geophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2023
44. Generation and fate of basal meltwater during winter, western Greenland Ice Sheet
- Author
-
Joel Harper, Toby Meierbachtol, Neil Humphrey, Jun Saito, and Aidan Stansberry
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,QE1-996.5 ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,13. Climate action ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Basal sliding in the ablation zone of the Greenland Ice Sheet is closely associated with water from surface melt introduced to the bed in summer, yet melting of basal ice also generates subglacial water year-round. Assessments of basal melt rely on modeling with results strongly dependent upon assumptions with poor observational constraints. Here we use surface and borehole measurements to investigate the generation and fate of basal meltwater in the ablation zone of Isunnguata Sermia basin, western Greenland. The observational data are used to constrain estimates of the heat and water balances, providing insights into subglacial hydrology during the winter months when surface melt is minimal or nonexistent. Despite relatively slow ice flow speeds during winter, the basal meltwater generation from sliding friction remains manyfold greater than that due to geothermal heat flux. A steady acceleration of ice flow over the winter period at our borehole sites can cause the rate of basal water generation to increase by up to 20 %. Borehole measurements show high but steady basal water pressure rather than monotonically increasing pressure. Ice and groundwater sinks for water do not likely have sufficient capacity to accommodate the meltwater generated in winter. Analysis of basal cavity dynamics suggests that cavity opening associated with flow acceleration likely accommodates only a portion of the basal meltwater, implying that a residual is routed to the terminus through a poorly connected drainage system. A forcing from cavity expansion at high pressure may explain observations of winter acceleration in western Greenland.
- Published
- 2021
45. Radiostratigraphy Reflects the Present-Day, Internal Ice Flow Field in the Ablation Zone of Western Greenland
- Author
-
Caitlyn Florentine, Joel Harper, Jesse Johnson, and Toby Meierbachtol
- Subjects
ice sheet dynamics ,radiostratigraphy ,ice deformation ,ablation zone ,Greenland ice sheet ,Science - Abstract
Englacial radar reflectors in the ablation zone of the Greenland Ice Sheet are derived from layering deposited in the accumulation zone over past millennia. The original layer structure is distorted by ice flow toward the margin. In a simplified case, shear and normal strain incurred between the ice divide and terminus should align depositional layers such that they closely approximate particle paths through the ablation zone where horizontal motion dominates. It is unclear, however, if this relationship holds in western Greenland where complex bed topography, three dimensional ice flow, and historical changes to ice sheet mass and geometry since layer deposition may promote a misalignment between present-day layer orientation and the modern ice flow field. We investigate this problem using a suite of analyses that leverage ice sheet models and observational datasets. Our findings suggest that across a study sector of western Greenland, the radiostratigraphy of the ablation zone is closely aligned with englacial particle paths, and is not far departed from a state of balance. The englacial radiostratigraphy thus provides insight into the modern, local, internal flow field, and may serve to further constrain ice sheet models that simulate ice dynamics in this region.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Rapid and sensitive response of Greenland’s groundwater system to ice sheet change
- Author
-
Jens-Ove Näslund, Dirk van As, Timo Ruskeeniemi, Joel T. Harper, Anne Kontula, Jun Saito, Jan-Olof Selroos, Neil F. Humphrey, Lillemor Claesson Liljedahl, Toby Meierbachtol, and Sven Follin
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Hydrogeology ,Oceanography ,Bedrock ,Borehole ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Greenland ice sheet ,Fjord ,Groundwater discharge ,Ice sheet ,Groundwater ,Geology - Abstract
Greenland Ice Sheet mass loss is impacting connected terrestrial and marine hydrologic systems with global consequences. Groundwater is a key component of water cycling in the Arctic, underlying the 1.7e6 km2 ice sheet and forming offshore freshwater reserves. However, despite its vast extent, the response of Greenland’s groundwater to ongoing ice sheet change is unknown. Here we present in-situ observations of deep groundwater conditions under the Greenland Ice Sheet, obtained in a 651-metre-long proglacial bedrock borehole angled under the ice sheet margin. We find that Greenland’s groundwater system responds rapidly and sensitively to relatively minor ice sheet forcing. Hydraulic head clearly varies over multi-annual, seasonal and diurnal timescales, which we interpret as a response to fluid pressure forcing at the ice/bed interface associated with changes in overlying ice loading and ice sheet hydrology. We find a systematic decline in hydraulic head over the eight-year observational period is linked primarily to ice sheet mass loss. Ongoing and future ice thinning will probably reduce groundwater discharge rates, with potential impacts to submarine freshwater discharge, freshwater delivery to fjords and biogeochemical fluxes in the Arctic. Greenland’s groundwater system responds rapidly to ice-sheet change, according to borehole observations from underneath the ice-sheet margin.
- Published
- 2021
47. Greenland and Canadian Arctic ice temperature profiles
- Author
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Anja Løkkegaard, Kenneth Mankoff, Christian Zdanowicz, Gary D. Clow, Martin P. Lüthi, Samuel Doyle, Henrik Thomsen, David Fisher, Joel Harper, Andy Aschwanden, Bo M. Vinther, Dorthe Dahl-Jensen, Harry Zekollari, Toby Meierbachtol, Ian McDowell, Neil Humphrey, Anne Solgaard, Nanna B. Karlsson, Shfaqat Abbas Khan, Benjamin Hills, Robert Law, Bryn Hubbard, Poul Christoffersen, Mylène Jacquemart, Robert S. Fausto, and William T. Colgan
- Abstract
Here, we present a compilation of 85 ice temperature profiles from 79 boreholes from the Greenland Ice Sheet and peripheral ice caps, as well as local ice caps in the Canadian Arctic. Only 25 profiles (32 %) were previously available in open-access data repositories. The remaining 54 profiles (68 %) are being made digitally available here for the first time. These newly available profiles, which are associated with pre-2010 boreholes, have been submitted by community members or digitized from published graphics and/or data tables. All 85 profiles are now made available in both absolute (meters) and normalized (0 to 1 ice thickness) depth scales, and are accompanied by extensive metadata. This metadata includes a transparent description of data provenance. The ice temperature profiles span 70 years, with the earliest profile being from 1950 at Camp VI, West Greenland. To highlight the value of this database in evaluating ice flow simulations, we compare the ice temperature profiles from the Greenland Ice Sheet with an ice flow simulation by the Parallel Ice Sheet Model (PISM). We find a cold bias in modeled near-surface ice temperatures within the ablation area, a warm bias in modeled basal ice temperatures at inland cold-bedded sites, and an apparent underestimation of deformational heating in high-strain settings. These biases provide process-level insight on simulated ice temperatures., The Cryosphere Discussions, ISSN:1994-0432, ISSN:1994-0440
- Published
- 2022
48. Supplementary material to 'Greenland and Canadian Arctic ice temperature profiles'
- Author
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Anja Løkkegaard, Kenneth Mankoff, Christian Zdanowicz, Gary D. Clow, Martin P. Lüthi, Samuel Doyle, Henrik Thomsen, David Fisher, Joel Harper, Andy Aschwanden, Bo M. Vinther, Dorthe Dahl-Jensen, Harry Zekollari, Toby Meierbachtol, Ian McDowell, Neil Humphrey, Anne Solgaard, Nanna B. Karlsson, Shfaqat Abbas Khan, Benjamin Hills, Robert Law, Bryn Hubbard, Poul Christoffersen, Mylène Jacquemart, Robert S. Fausto, and William T. Colgan
- Published
- 2022
49. Supplementary material to "Greenland and Canadian Arctic ice temperature profiles"
- Author
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Løkkegaard, Anja, primary, Mankoff, Kenneth, additional, Zdanowicz, Christian, additional, Clow, Gary D., additional, Lüthi, Martin P., additional, Doyle, Samuel, additional, Thomsen, Henrik, additional, Fisher, David, additional, Harper, Joel, additional, Aschwanden, Andy, additional, Vinther, Bo M., additional, Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe, additional, Zekollari, Harry, additional, Meierbachtol, Toby, additional, McDowell, Ian, additional, Humphrey, Neil, additional, Solgaard, Anne, additional, Karlsson, Nanna B., additional, Khan, Shfaqat Abbas, additional, Hills, Benjamin, additional, Law, Robert, additional, Hubbard, Bryn, additional, Christoffersen, Poul, additional, Jacquemart, Mylène, additional, Fausto, Robert S., additional, and Colgan, William T., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Greenland and Canadian Arctic ice temperature profiles
- Author
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Løkkegaard, Anja, primary, Mankoff, Kenneth, additional, Zdanowicz, Christian, additional, Clow, Gary D., additional, Lüthi, Martin P., additional, Doyle, Samuel, additional, Thomsen, Henrik, additional, Fisher, David, additional, Harper, Joel, additional, Aschwanden, Andy, additional, Vinther, Bo M., additional, Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe, additional, Zekollari, Harry, additional, Meierbachtol, Toby, additional, McDowell, Ian, additional, Humphrey, Neil, additional, Solgaard, Anne, additional, Karlsson, Nanna B., additional, Khan, Shfaqat Abbas, additional, Hills, Benjamin, additional, Law, Robert, additional, Hubbard, Bryn, additional, Christoffersen, Poul, additional, Jacquemart, Mylène, additional, Fausto, Robert S., additional, and Colgan, William T., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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